Ramblin Wreck said:
I'm not really sure how a two-sentence reply is "flailing around"; perhaps you would like to point out what is so obviously wrong rather than just derisively dismissing the other side while providing no counterarguments.
Fishy said:
so basically all you managed to do this in post was bash what other people have said (classing my own loosely stated example as a desperate attempt, get off your high horse)
unless you're going to actually substantiate why it's wrong, I don't see how you think yourself to be respecting anything by just avoiding saying anything for OR against this debate, therein saving yourself any apparent embarrassment of trying to absolve your 'obvious' wrong.
The reason I dismissed Ramblin Wreck's argument should be evident just from reading his post, which literally suggested that if an animal does
anything, then it is morally okay. Sorry, but I'm not going to lend that any more credence than it deserves (I think it's worth pointing out how funny it is, though).
I didn't even dismiss your post, Fishy, so I'm not sure what you're complaining about. I clearly explained why your "population control" argument was incorrect: we can control animal populations without mass killings, and we are responsible for those populations in the first place.
UncleSam said:
It's the way things are, there is nothing wrong or evil about following our instincts.
This is the Naturalistic Fallacy (a huge portion of the arguments in this thread are, actually).
ssbbm said:
My morals don't care about whether or not I eat animals.
Why should they?
You can't say that "my moral code says X, so therefore X is justified" any more than you can say that "my religion says Y, so therefore Y is justified."
In fact, the entire "moral relativism" dialogue going on here has gotten totally out of hand and is obscuring the real issue. Here is the actual, interesting question at hand: "is eating meat justified? Does the benefit we gain from killing animals outweigh the suffering we cause them, and why?" Somehow, people have spun this into a semantic clusterfuck about the definition of "morality," and have turned the question into "do certain cultures
believe that eating meat is justified?" Well of course they do, and that isn't even remotely relevant-- nor does it even
entertain the idea of whether meat-eating is ultimately justified. Gee, semantics sure are exciting.